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Famous TV Houses (UK): Which One Could You Afford?

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Famous TV Houses (UK): Which One Could You Afford?
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Ever pictured yourself living in one of Bridgerton’s grand country estates?

Could market trader Del Boy afford his Peckham flat today?

And which characters’ homes have increased most in value since the time they moved in?

We’ve valued the most famous TV houses in the UK to find out. 

 

The cost of renting famous UK TV houses

The average UK rental price in June 2021 sat at £1029 — up by 6.6% from last year.

TV houses below UK average rent

Only four homes in our study come in below the UK average, the homes in:

  • 2 Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps
  • Derry GIrls
  • Peep Show
  • Gavin & Stacey

UK TV houses between £1000 – £2000 per month

Due to average London rental prices being much higher (currently standing at £1,832), it’s not surprising that many London-set properties fell into the £1000-£2000 bracket, including:

  • Luther
  • Fleabag
  • Mr Bean’s flat
  • Phil Mitchell’s home in Eastenders.

UK TV houses between £2000 – 5000 per month

Three decades on from when Del Boy and Rodney Trotter first hit our screens, the famous 3-bedroom flat in Only Fools and Horses now sets one back around £2,300.

Other properties with rents between £2,000 and £5,000 are:

  • Doc Martin’s cottage
  • Will Mckenzie’s home in Inbetweeners
  • Sherlock’s infamous flat: 221B Baker Street.

The most expensive UK TV houses’ rents

Our research also quantified just how unrealistic show settings are.

The family in Outnumbered may come across as the average middle-class family, but the actual home, a 5-bed, Victorian Terrace in a prime London location. It would actually cost more than £7,000 a month to rent and £1,903,500 to buy.

Then there are the aspirational property rents which will make your eyes water. Could you picture yourself the lord or lady of the manor?

If you wanted to move into Cruella’s ‘Hell Hall’ or the Duke of Hasting’s estate in Bridgerton, you would need to dish out £100,000s… a month!

how much to rent

TV homes: Values then and now

Back in 1813, one acre of land cost around £40, meaning that Castle Howard in York (where the Duke’s home was filmed) would have been valued around £352,000.

Since then, the value of homes has increased by a staggering 61080%, leaving the current price at £215,000,000!

But what about more reasonably sized homes?

In a few more decades, Del Boy really could be a millionaire. Since 1981, the value of his home has gone up by a staggering 1569% (from £36,400 to £607,100).

In Absolutely Fabulous, Eddy claims she bought her luxurious home for £1 million, according to house prices at the time.

In true Eddy fashion she seems to tell quite a sizable fib: the home would have cost Eddy around £526,000 in 1992. She made a great investment though: today, the house is valued around £3,700,000. 

Famous TV Houses price rises

Can our favourite UK TV characters really afford the homes they live in? 

We know that TV shows and films are exaggerated versions of reality, but some of the character’s homes are simply unbelievable.

Mr Bean

Mr Bean, for example, doesn’t have any clear employment or means of income. If he was on a job-seeking allowance of £299 a week, there’s no way he could afford his London rent today of £1,750 a month. Is he a squatter?

Del Boy

What about scheming market stall trader Del Boy? Today, a successful market stall trader could hope to bring home around £2000 a month, but even if Del Boy brought this home, he’s still shy of his £2,300 rent a month.

Tony Johnson (Afterlife)

A more recent example would be the main character from After Life, played by Ricky Gervais. The character, Tony Johnson, is a journalist in a small regional newspaper.

The show may be set in the fictional town of Tambury, but the home is actually found in a prime location in Hampstead, London, near where Ricky Gervais lives, an area in which a regional-reporter could only dream of living in.

Other TV homes

Because of the UK’s housing crisis, most of us — and even some of our favourite characters — could never afford the gorgeous (and even normal) homes we see on screen.

But whether it’s the Brown’s whimsical home in Paddington, or Sherlock’s moody bachelor pad, a great show transports us into places we could only dream of living in — if only for an hour or two. 

Methodology 

To estimate the current value (Q2 2021) of the properties, we compared the properties to similar properties in each area.

To find the original value, we found the percentage change of properties in the region from the original date using Nationwide’s house price index, and other separate sources listed below.

To calculate rent, we used a calculation sourced from an Estate Agent’s guide. For the characters’ salaries, we used Glassdoor.com. We used desk research and Wiki Fandom to source show information.

Sources:

https://www.nationwide.co.uk/house-price-index

http://www.pbprop.co.uk/renting-your-property

https://www.fandom.com
https://www.glassdoor.co.uk/member/home/index.htm
https://www.savills.com/impacts/market-trends/rich-jane-austens-mr-darcy-todays-terms.html
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7390043/Peaky-Blinders-crime-boss-Tommy-Shelby-worth-450MILLION-today.html

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